Warren G. Schwartz, Trustee, (By Substitution) v. J. R. Cianchette & Sons Corp.

362 F.2d 500, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 5647
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1966
Docket6159_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 362 F.2d 500 (Warren G. Schwartz, Trustee, (By Substitution) v. J. R. Cianchette & Sons Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren G. Schwartz, Trustee, (By Substitution) v. J. R. Cianchette & Sons Corp., 362 F.2d 500, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 5647 (1st Cir. 1966).

Opinion

McENTEE, Circuit Judge.

This appeal stems from the failure of one Joseph Halpern 1 to complete the purchase of certain business property located in Bangor and Glenburn, Maine, which he agreed to buy from the appellees, J. R. Cianchette & Sons Corp. and Joseph R. Cianchette, debtors in possession under a Chapter XI arrangement. Three properties are involved in the sale — two in Bangor known as the Union Street and the North Bangor sites, and a third in Glenburn. The total purchase price is $85,000 of which the buyer made a down payment of $8500. The sellers’ business affairs being under the supervision of the Bankruptcy Court, the sale required the approval and confirmation of the referee in bankruptcy, which the sellers promptly obtained. 2 Shortly thereafter, the buyer refused to complete his purchase 3 and the sellers brought a petition in the Bankruptcy Court to compel him to do so. The buyer countered with a cross petition for the return of his deposit and for reimbursement of certain expenses paid by him for abstracts of title to the real estate involved in the sale. 4 In the nearly three years that followed, four hearings were held by the referee in bankruptcy and his findings of fact in each of these hearings were reviewed and affirmed by the district court. From each of the four orders entered by the district court affirming the referee’s findings the buyer appeals. 5

At the initial hearing the buyer’s basic contention was that he is relieved of his obligation to complete the purchase (1) because he is being called upon to accept substantially less acreage in the Union Street site than the sellers had agreed to convey, and (2) that on the date the sale was confirmed the seller was not in a position to deliver good and merchantable title.

The acreage issue raises substantial questions of fact and law which were discussed by the referee at some length. The buyer relies principally upon a clause in his offer which refers to the Union Street site as “consisting of 70 acres more or less.” 6 It appears that the entire Union Street site consists of some sixty-six acres including thirteen house lots with an area of about one acre each. The remaining portion is industrial property which had been used by the sellers in *502 connection with their former business. 7 Located thereon is a stone quarry, a stone crusher and some accessory buildings. This industrial portion contains about fifty-three acres. The sellers contend that this is the only portion of the site involved in the sale. The buyer claims he is entitled under his contract to sixty-six acres.

The following evidence was adduced on this issue. On July 3, 1961, some fifteen days before the buyer made his offer, he, an attorney for the sellers, and a consulting geologist made an inspection of the Union Street property. The geologist pointed out the boundaries of the industrial portion. The attorney stated he was uncertain of the exact acreage but gave the buyer two deeds covering the entire site which the sellers had received when they bought this property. The buyer was aware of the total acreage recited in these two deeds and took them with him to read leisurely that evening. 8 While at the site the attorney for the sellers told the buyer that the house lots were not included in the sale. 9 A few days later, but still well before the time the buyer submitted his offer, one of the sellers gave him a detailed map of the Union Street property on which he pointed out the boundaries of the industrial portion of the property. On the basis of this evidence the referee found that under the circumstances any disparity in acreage in the Union Street property was of no material consequence; that there was not the slightest evidence of any misrepresentation of the acreage by the sellers and any mistake with reference to it was entirely the fault of the buyer.

In support of his contention of unmer-chantability, the buyer alleged certain in-sufficiencies of title and numerous specific deficiencies in the conduct and confirmation of the sale. The referee rejected the claim of insufficiency of title and made a seriatim disposition of the objections raised to the sale 10 as trifling and inconsequential. He also made an overall finding applicable to both issues that the dealings of the parties constituted a judicial sale, the finality of which he would not disturb in the absence of substantial grounds. Thereupon the referee denied the buyer’s motion for refund of his deposit, allowed him reimbursement of his title expenses in an amount to be determined, and ordered the buyer to complete his purchase. On review, the district court affirmed the referee’s findings but ruled that under his *503 agreement the buyer is entitled to take these properties free and clear of any encumbrances that would render them un-merchantable and recommitted the case to the referee for such a finding.

This necessitated the second hearing. At this hearing the sellers produced evidence that the title to each of the properties involved was good and merchantable as of the date the sale was confirmed. 11 The buyer offered no evidence. The referee found that the sellers “are now in a position as indeed they have been at all relevant times in the past, to convey a good and merchantable title to these premises.” In this second hearing the referee also took occasion to reaffirm his previous findings, again ordered the buyer to complete his purchase and in the event he failed to do so, authorized the sellers to resell the property for the buyer’s account and hold him liable for any resulting deficiency. 12

More than two years having passed since the sale was confirmed and the buyer still not having completed his purchase, the sellers succeeded in obtaining another purchaser for part of the property and petitioned the referee to confirm the resale. While this was pending it was discovered that the sellers’ lease to the Braley Pit which was involved in the resale, had never been recorded and that the fee in the property bad since been sold to a bona fide purchaser who recorded his deed apparently without actual notice of the lease. Neither party had any previous knowledge of this defect and it was the first time it had been called to the attention of the referee.

The case, which was then pending in this court, was promptly remanded to the district court and from there was again sent to the referee for a determination of title. At this hearing the original buyer strongly urged that the previous orders directing him to complete his purchase be vacated since it was clear that the sellers had no title to a material portion of the properties when the sale was confirmed. 13

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Bluebook (online)
362 F.2d 500, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 5647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-g-schwartz-trustee-by-substitution-v-j-r-cianchette-sons-ca1-1966.